Furniture
Jigsaw Puzzle ©
By Michael
Casey
You can buy
anything on the Internet and have it delivered to you, and you get a good
price. Though there is one snag, certainly if you are buying furniture, it does
not arrive as you see it on your screen, on the Internet, no it arrives like a
jigsaw puzzle. What I mean is its all flat-packed and you have to grunt and groan
and curse your way through it till it is assembled.
As I have a
funny stairs I had to have pine beds as ordinary beds just would not fit up the
stairs, I did want a pine bed anyway but to have to assemble it was a small
challenge. A pine bed is one thing as it is just a rectangle with slats in the
middle, however when you move to different items of furniture it does get more
complicated.
My bed was a
success, and I remember my mother launching herself onto the mattress, all 15
stones plus of her, to prove we had built it properly. It was only 3 days later
that the shop discovered they had forgotten the central support. Other than
that the bed lasted over 20 years, my children were conceived in it. I can
remember as a child how you used to need a spanner, as the beds were made of
metal with a spring section attached with enormous and very heavy head boards.
So we have
all progressed with our pine beds that are nice to look at and to sleep in.
Though I must say the mattress should cost at least double the cost of the
actual bed, I am heavy so maybe I’m prejudiced, but as a rule of thumb I think
I’m right. As my dad used to say, buy rubbish and you end up paying more as you
buy twice. So save money by buying quality, and you can get quality from the
most unexpected sources, so don’t be a shop snob, though having said that I do
have my favourite store.
So the thing
arrives and you tear open the box, I used to use a pen from my computer desk,
here in front of me from where I’m talking to you from. Until I kept on
breaking the pens, so I advanced to a box cutter, you can open anything in
seconds. Then you spill everything on
the floor and kick something under a chair, it takes half an hour to find it,
you curse and curse and blame the cat, until finally you find it.
Or that used
to be the way I did things, nowadays I’m like a surgeon, I open and lay out the
bits, the screws and Alan Keys , the wood and metal bits. The long and the
short and the round bits, and any other weird and wonderful parts to my set of
drawers or office chair or bed, or whatever it is. Once laid out, a bit like
cutlery at a state banquet, I begin. At a banquet I believe you start at the
outside and work your way to the inside, and remember not to wipe your mouth on
your cuffs.
As for
making an office chair you just follow your nose, and never read the
instructions, does anybody ever read assembly instructions. They may as well
include a bag of sweets instead of the instructions, nobody ever reads them.
Until things go wrong, or at the very end to see why you have 4 extra screws
and where on earth should they go. Or just to hold up the instructions
defiantly and spit in them and throw them in the bin, you are a winner, who
needs instructions, or pictographs that only Egyptians from 4000 years ago
would understand, and was it them who invented Ikea in the Valley of the Kings.